Research

I am a current Ph.D. student, environmental optimist, and a wilderness enthusiast.

My various research experiences have led me around the globe; whether exploring Muriqui monkey population demographics in the Mata Atlântica rainforest of Brazil, supporting Kit Fox conservation in the high deserts of Colorado, or studying mammalian foraging in the Upper Peninsula North Woods, a common conservation theme emerged.

That theme, and the cumulative experiences that lead to it, now inform my graduate research and career goals in Conservation Science. During my myriad ecological field seasons, it became evident that conservation and research efforts on the part of dedicated researchers could not come to fruition without recognition of the vast, complex knowledge and management rights of global Indigenous peoples.

My research, in the Great Bear Rainforest of British Columbia, Canada seeks to aid in uniting ecological science and Indigenous knowledge towards achieving conservation goals and national recognition of Indigenous management rights.

In 2017, I continued my research, partnerships, and adventure on the Central Coast when I joined Dr. Chris Darimont’s Applied Conservation Science Lab. While in its preliminary stages, my Ph.D. will seek to better understand value-based environmental decision making in Canada and globally, inform conservation of endangered species and ecosystems of the Great Bear Rainforest, and uphold Indigenous knowledge and proprietary management rights.

My work is supported first and foremost by Central Coast First Nations and empowered by their knowledge, vision, and collaboration. It is additionally sustained by funding through the Raincoast Conservation Foundation, and formerly the National Geographic Society’s Young Explorers’ Grant, the The Marine Environmental Observation Prediction and Response Network (MEOPAR) of Canada, and the tireless work of my many academic collaborators, friends, and colleagues. It is reinvigorated daily by my experiences in the beautiful wild that is BC’s Central Coast and temperate rainforest.

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Past Research: Focused on the impacts of granivory by rodents as a mechanism to control invasive plants in the Upper Peninsula of Wisconsin and Michigan. My undergraduate research publication is available here.

For information on my past experiences, future goals, or other information, see my CV.